With a wheel base less than four by two feet, the sensor-heavy O-R3 is fitted with 360 degree HD cameras, thermal imaging, a laser scanner and Lidar (light detecting and ranging), utilizing SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) technology to navigate its surroundings, identifying objects up to 330 feet away.

Brigadier Khalid Nasser Alrazooqi of Dubai Police confirmed to CNN that the O-R3’s surveillance tools will be used to identify faces, wanted vehicles and unattended objects. The robot will alert police officers in central command, with data also available via mobile apps.

At 275 lbs and with a top speed of 9.3 mph, the O-R3 ground vehicle can’t chase down criminals. However it does have an ace in the hole. Or rather, in the trunk. The robot’s deployable drone can reach 27.9 mph to track suspects — and not even Usain Bolt can outrun that.

Other features according to OTSAW’s website include perimeter breach detection and monitoring environmental factors including CO2 levels.

“It will be part of our smart police IoT (‘Internet of Things’) systems all integrated (with) each other,” Brigadier Alrazooqi adds, saying that the force will start with one unit “and will increase the numbers after we … take all the feedback from the police units.”

Manufacturer OTSAW told CNN that Dubai Police have agreed in principal to acquire up to 100 units by 2020, leased at a cost of $10,000 per unit per month. OTSAW adds that it is currently in talks with “multiple government agencies from different countries” regarding the model.

The O-R3 is a pricey move and part of Dubai Police’s drive towards making 25% of its force a robot by the year 2030.

For those disappointed by the scale of the O-R3, Dubai Police is still thinking big.

“We’re planning later on to have robot (officers) in driverless cars,” said the brigadier in a previous interview with CNN in April, adding that the police want to work with Tesla and other undisclosed companies.